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A Pool of Cloning Anemones


A Pool of Cloning Anemones
Photo Information
Copyright: Feather Forestwalker (FeatherBirdLady) Silver Star Critiquer/Gold Note Writer [C: 28 W: 0 N: 79] (458)
Genre: Animals
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2006-10-19
Categories: Cnidarians
Camera: Fuji FinePix, Smart Media
Photo Version: Original Version
Date Submitted: 2006-10-20 22:18
Viewed: 953
Points: 4
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
Taken at a beach between Pudding and Virgin Creek's, near Fort Bragg, CA, during the low tide of afternoon, 10-19-06.

From Monterey Bay Aquarium's website:

Cloning Anemone
Anthopleura elegantissima

These anemones used to be called aggregating anemones, because they aggregate together into large groups. We now know these aggregates of anemones are actually genetic clones of one another, each being an exact duplicate of its neighbor, just like identical twins. They are abundant on rock faces or wharf pilings, in tide pools or crevices, and can be found singly or in dense aggregations from Alaska to Baja California. They eat copepods, isopods, amphipods and other small animals that contact the tentacles. In turn, they are preyed upon by nudibranchs, snails, and sea stars (such as the ochre and batstar).
Aggregating individuals are generally around 3 inches (8 cm.) in crown diameter, while solitary individuals are often larger, up to almost 10 inches (25 cm.) in diameter. The crown is green to white, with numerous short tentacles colored with pink, blue or lavender tips. The column has wart like structures called tubercles, to which pebbles, shell fragments, and bits of seaweed adhere to. This coating reduces dehydration from the sun at low tide. So when the animals are contracted, their bodies form low mounds looking like a bed of coarse sand or shell gravel.

Sexual reproduction occurs between February and September, but these anemones can also reproduce asexually (creating an identical twin) by a process called longitudinal fission. When genetically different anemones meet, it's WAR! They pull out their stinging tentacles (the short white tentacles seen at the top of this page) and fight. Adjacent aggregates of clones are usually separated by an anemone-free zone up to two inches (5 cm.) wide.

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ThreadThread Starter Messages Updated
To anel: Glad you like thisFeatherBirdLady 1 10-21 13:50
To Scott: You're welcomeFeatherBirdLady 1 10-21 13:48
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Critiques [Translate]

  • Great 
  • Scott Gold Star Critiquer/Gold Note Writer [C: 224 W: 0 N: 316] (1540)
  • [2006-10-21 2:03]
  • [+]

Feather,

Nice, thanks for the note.

scott

  • Great 
  • anel Gold Star Critiquer/Gold Note Writer [C: 1730 W: 0 N: 3938] (15810)
  • [2006-10-21 6:50]
  • [+]

Hi Feather,
Amazing picture for somebody who doesn't live next to the ocean.Marvellous. Thanks for the explanations(a war between Sea-anemones, sounds just surrealistic!)
Anne

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